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To know oneself is rarely a moment of clarity; it’s a process of shedding noise, of seeing what remains when everything else falls away. Bang Pineda’s latest collection is the search made visible: a dialogue in white, grey, and denim blue. This is State of Bang: measured but full of feeling, tracing the slow transformation from wonder to knowing.
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“I only had three months to make the whole collection — sixty looks,” the streetwear designer says, unfazed. He smiles, the way one does when the clock is running out but inspiration refuses to leave the room.
Curiosity, in White
It begins in white — a color often mistaken for emptiness, but here, it’s a beginning. “My state of mind this year is about being who I am, starting by being curious,” he explains. “That’s how we all start, right? We are curious about something.”




His first act channels Alice in Wonderland, that surreal fable of falling, shrinking, and expanding — emotionally and otherwise. Thankfully, Pineda’s Wonderland is structured, tailored, and wearable. Accessories play the part of eccentric tea party guests. “Everything is in white,” he says. “Everything white. That’s where the curiosity starts.”
The runway becomes a looking glass, reflecting not fantasy but a designer’s fascination with his own evolution.
Limbo, in Grey
Then comes the storm. “After curiosity, we all go through a stage of grey,” Pineda continues. “Like, where do I go? What happens to me after this? I’m curious about my talent, but where does this talent go? So, it’s in limbo.”




This middle act — all slate tones and raw finishes — captures the chaos between discovery and certainty. The fabrics look wet, kissed by rain, their surfaces imperfect and alive. “It’s clean, but at the same time, unfinished.”
Grey, in Pineda’s world, isn’t dull. It’s the color of process, of becoming.
Arrival, in Denim
Finally, clarity — rendered in denim. “At the end of the day, you find your core,” he says. “Who are you? And Bang is about streetwear.”




The final act bursts with what he calls his core self: strong, grounded, urban, and bold. “It ends in my streetwear collection, which is denim — very streetwear, very strong, fierce.”
If white was the question and grey the doubt, then denim is the answer: familiar, comfortable, but still brimming with identity.
Portraits of a Life
The set itself is a glimpse into Pineda’s subconscious — a sculptural tableau of the people who made him who he is. “People will come in and say, ‘Who are these?’” he says, half amused, half sentimental. “That’s Vicki Belo. That’s her shadow. Those are my parents. Sarah G’s over there. Then that’s my little dog. That’s me playing tennis.”

Each metallic silhouette glimmers like a memory caught mid-motion — affectionate, unguarded, and deeply personal. They aren’t props; they’re presences.
“These are the people who are close to me,” he says simply.
Knowing and Being
State of Bang might be his most personal collection yet, but it also feels universal — a visual autobiography anyone can project themselves onto. It’s a meditation on growing up, on asking “Who am I?” and finally being okay with the answer.
“Out of nothing, I became curious,” he says. “And then in the middle ground, I found myself as a streetwear designer. So you ask who you are. You find who you are. Who is that? Bang Pineda is a streetwear designer.”

One could argue — especially after seeing this show — that Bang Pineda is more than that. He’s a man who understands that curiosity is creation, chaos is process, and clarity is presence. Truth rarely arrives as revelation. It’s something assembled until the reflection that stares back finally feels familiar.
Photographed by KIERAN PUNAY of KLIQ INC.
